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Microsoft Partners With Baidu, China's Top Search Engine

countertrolling writes with news that Microsoft has struck an agreement with Baidu.com, the most popular search engine in mainland China, to provide results for English-language queries. From the NY Times: "Baidu, which dominates Chinese-language search services here with about 83 percent of the market, has been trying for years to improve its English-language search services because English searches on its site are as many as 10 million a day, the company said. Now it has a powerful partner. 'More and more people here are searching for English terms,' Kaiser Kuo, the company’s spokesman, said Monday. 'But Baidu hasn’t done a good job. So here’s a way for us to do it.' Baidu and Microsoft did not disclose terms of the agreement. But the new English-language search results will undoubtedly be censored, since Beijing maintains strict controls over Internet companies and requires those operating on the mainland to censor results the government deems dangerous or troublesome, including references to human rights issues and dissidents."

115 comments

  1. Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish dissent. by sethstorm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Compliance isn't an excuse for assisting China. But what's a few dead, organ-harvested people under the bridge who voiced their opposition to the company town?

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  2. Just 10 million english searches by alantus · · Score: 0

    With 83% market share in China I would have expected way more than 10 million english searches a day.
    I guess Internet is not so widespread in China as in other Asian countries likes Japan or South Korea.

    1. Re:Just 10 million english searches by node+3 · · Score: 3, Informative

      That, or people in China speak Chinese.

    2. Re:Just 10 million english searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      1) Majority of the searches done in China will be in say.... Chinese....
      2) The population of English speakers in China is about 10 million (based on wikipedia). See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_English-speaking_population

    3. Re:Just 10 million english searches by grainofsand · · Score: 1

      No one outside of the Baidu management team actually believes that Baidu has anything like an 83% of the search market in China.

      --
      A dream is good. A plan is better.
    4. Re:Just 10 million english searches by JanneM · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How many Chinese-language searches do you think you have in the US each day? Would be interesting, too, to see the number of English-language searches in Japan, say, or in Germany.

      Most people, the world over, only ever see the part of the net that's in their own language. The idea of the net as a world-wide melting pot is pretty overstated. It's like a large cocktail party where everyone is in the same room, but clustered into separate groups that talk only to each other, mostly ignoring everyone else.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    5. Re:Just 10 million english searches by MacTO · · Score: 3, Interesting

      While you are probably mostly correct about people only ever seeing the part of the net that is in their own language, I find a disproportionate number of the sites that I visit to be in English, German, and Japanese. The English part is easily explained (I'm an English speaker in an English speaking nation, who uses English services), but the German and Japanese part isn't so easy to explain. This leads me to believe that there are dominant languages on the net, English is one of the and that probably explains why Baidu wants to improve their English language results.

      (To go to that cocktail party analogy, people mostly cluster according to their language but they use a dominant language when they want to talk to other clusters.)

    6. Re:Just 10 million english searches by JanneM · · Score: 1

      Well, do you understand German or Japanese? Do you have a special interest (manga or anime for instance) that makes you seek out these foreign-language sites? In either case it makes you rather unusual.

      Few people ever feel the need to talk to those other clusters. Few people have the ability, even if they wanted to. Most people do not speak any of the world languages as a second language after all. The few that can and want to connect with other webs - and they really are quite few - tend to act as bridges, filtering through the information that most people in their home cluster could find useful. When a weird video clip from Japan spreads through the US intartubes it arrives through a small number of people that do keep up with the Japanese web.

      This lack of curiosity is natural. Much of the web really is local. It's about information that's really only useful for people from a specific region, country or even city. Even generic information has a surprising amount of locally specific components.

      Japanese sites, Swedish sites and US sites about scuba diving, for instance, has a lot of information in common (I've been looking them up lately). But then, two talk in metric, the other in imperial units; recommended equipment may not have the same name or even be available in the other areas; local certification rules and regulations may differ; equipment for one area may be completely unsuitable for another; and any talk about specific diving schools, diving spots or interesting wildlife is of course completely local. As a result, I tend to mostly read Japanese sites as here's where I'll do most of my diving, even though I'm really more comfortable with both Swedish and English than with Japanese.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    7. Re:Just 10 million english searches by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      That, or people in China speak Chinese.

      How about Mandarin or Cantonese?

      Sorry, had to be pedantic.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    8. Re:Just 10 million english searches by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Correct, people in China often speak one of the two major forms of Chinese.

      This seems sufficiently apparent, I'm not exactly sure what's meant to be pedantic about it. Redundant might be a better word.

    9. Re:Just 10 million english searches by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      This leads me to believe that there are dominant languages on the net, English is one of the and that probably explains why Baidu wants to improve their English language results.

      English is certainly one of the dominant languages on the Net, but so is Chinese. The reason why you don't usually get Chinese search results in your queries is because the writing system is completely different, and so you don't get accidental matches or near-matches on keywords.

  3. Can we call it by agendi · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Baidu Bing"... get it?

    --
    I just can't be bothered.
    1. Re:Can we call it by kikito · · Score: 1

      "Baidung"

    2. Re:Can we call it by Noughmad · · Score: 1

      The new internet version of Ba-dum-tish?

      --
      PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
    3. Re:Can we call it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *groan*

    4. Re:Can we call it by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      Well, at least somebody caught the original submission

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
  4. In Other News... by JMJimmy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ... Microsoft uses it's massive operating system/business software profits to buy it's way into yet another market.

    1. Re:In Other News... by artor3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Come on, who else is gonna do it? Yahoo? Altavista? Google won't because they aren't exactly on good terms with China what with the censorship and the hacking. This isn't a case of MS getting into a market by leveraging its monopoly powers -- it's a case of MS getting into a market by lacking the morals found in other companies. If you're gonna bash them, at least do it for the right reason.

    2. Re:In Other News... by node+3 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hahaha... Google and Yahoo are your shining examples? They were the first to bow down to China. (well, you sort of have a point about Altavista. I don't suppose Obsorne Computer doesn't do much business with China either)

      Google might be on the outs with China lately, but that bad blood took some while to accrue.

    3. Re:In Other News... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ironically, the profit Microsoft gets from China is negligible compared to how many people there use its software.

    4. Re:In Other News... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Google doesn't care about censorship in China. Morality can't even begin to be ascribed to it. Google might care that being China's bitch threatens its perceived integrity in other parts of the world. What idiot would register for Google+ if Google had a reputation as bad as Facebook's? What idiot would store all their data with Google when Google allows China full data center access? Microsoft... has no attributed integrity left to lose, not with the media and not with the people. ("Integrity" for both companies are in effect the same, i.e. none, but that doesn't stop us from trying to humanize corporations.)

  5. Re:Quick! by sethstorm · · Score: 2

    If one is to believe that our world is interconnected, then it only provides a model where liberty is granted only to the few who have the cash to purchase it - instead of providing it to all who seek it.

    China is a case of why you don't simply just go for business friendliness, but freedom for all citizens without regard to involvement in commerce.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  6. They by Stormwatch · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When you deal with the Chinese, sooner or later they will backstab you.
    And when you deal with Microsoft, sooner or later they will backstab you.

    Who's going to reach for the knife first?

    1. Re:They by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      Wtf, my post's title got cut. It was supposed to read "They're a perfect couple".

    2. Re:They by Kjella · · Score: 2

      Who's going to reach for the knife first?

      Probably more of a Crocodile Dundee moment. "You call that a knife? This is a knife."

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    3. Re:They by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cue Odd Couple music - duh duh duh duh duh...

    4. Re:They by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you deal with the Chinese, sooner or later they will backstab you. And when you deal with Microsoft, sooner or later they will backstab you.

      Who's going to reach for the knife first?

      Knights of the Storm(front?)watch make it right!

    5. Re:They by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      I just hope they wait for long enough to me to reach some popcorn.

      Now, in a serious note, MS has no power against China. Not even them are that evil.

    6. Re:They by pak9rabid · · Score: 1

      No, that's a spoon!

  7. Yes, just that its ring is more sinister in China. by sethstorm · · Score: 0

    Bing is the sound of the bullet striking metal after passing through the skull of someone who didn't have enough favor or cash to buy their freedom.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  8. Dealing with China == Today's Faustian deal by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    China will just reach for the gun and not bother with the knife. Then it'll harvest Microsoft for its IP and dispose of the rest.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    1. Re:Dealing with China == Today's Faustian deal by node+3 · · Score: 1

      And then Uncle Sam will ride in on a majestic bald eagle and spread jingoism across the land. Well, Uncle Sam was busy today with the fireworks and what not, but never fear, he sent his trusty sidekick sethstorm!

    2. Re:Dealing with China == Today's Faustian deal by gtall · · Score: 1

      Still fighting the Vietnam war, are ye?

    3. Re:Dealing with China == Today's Faustian deal by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Not sure what that's even supposed to mean. I'm just calling sethstorm out on his jingoism.

    4. Re:Dealing with China == Today's Faustian deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody here is quite sure what you are trying to say.

      You keep saying "jingoism" over and over like its some new word you learned.

      STFU

  9. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by rtfa-troll · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But what's a few dead, organ-harvested people under the bridge who voiced their opposition to the company town?

    A business expense.

    --
    =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  10. Bing. by BenJCarter · · Score: 2

    Microsoft search engine's name begins to make business sense...

    --
    For in politics, as in religion, it is equally absurd to aim at making proselytes by fire and sword. - Publius
  11. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by cgeys · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, what exactly have you done to not support Chinese? Do you buy products that have been only made and manufactured in the US, even if its higher price? Do you own iPhone or any other known mobile phone? Does any of your product read Made in China? Instead of blaming Microsoft for doing business with Chinese, what about you taking the first step?

  12. Re:Yes, just that its ring is more sinister in Chi by node+3 · · Score: 1

    A story about China? Somebody alert the jingoism brigade!

  13. microsoft = commie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yup its official now

  14. Re:Yes, just that its ring is more sinister in Chi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And US citizens, paying for the greatest part of the bullets, might as well be holding the gun.

  15. I wonder who... ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good, it's one of those case where I cannot but wonder who is going to screw the other around.

    Let's sit and watch.

  16. Re:Quick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    s/China/USA/

    and it's equally true.

  17. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yeah, let's go 5th-grade-lunch-room on a country with a few billion people, that's a good idea. CHINA YOU'RE A MEANIE SO YOU CAN'T SIT AT OUR TABLE

    It's people like you that start wars. Idiot.

  18. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by ozmanjusri · · Score: 3, Insightful

    what about you taking the first step?

    A good first step might for you to go to China and look for yourself.

    It's not the hellhole some people try to portray it as being, and neither are all of it's factories sweatshops.

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  19. remember, kids by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Funny

    Two evils only make a good when you multiply, not add.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  20. This will kill open source in China by tvlinux · · Score: 2

    If they are going to censor, they might as well censor open source products and tools. After working in China, I find Baidu does a very bad job of supporting Chinese language documentation for open source. Many programmers in China are very badly trained because they have only used Windoz. They know how push buttons and drag and drop to make software. Some have no idea how to really write code.

    1. Re:This will kill open source in China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some have no idea how to really write code.

      This is not limited to China thank you very much.

    2. Re:This will kill open source in China by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      If they are going to censor, they might as well censor open source products and tools. After working in China, I find Baidu does a very bad job of supporting Chinese language documentation for open source. Many programmers in China are very badly trained because they have only used Windoz. They know how push buttons and drag and drop to make software. Some have no idea how to really write code.

      LabView in red and gold?

      Be careful what you ask for.

    3. Re:This will kill open source in China by RobertinXinyang · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Opensorce is pretty much a dead concept in China already. They understand copying; but, why should they give credit to another person.

      Further, sharing is not a Chinese value. Why should they make it easier for another person to compete with them?

      Really, I work at a university in China. they are aware of the Western Linux and Opensource thing. They just have no interest in it. They do not understand the point of it; to them, it is simply based on an alien value system.

    4. Re:This will kill open source in China by jpapon · · Score: 1

      Many programmers in China are very badly trained because they have only used Windoz. They know how push buttons and drag and drop to make software. Some have no idea how to really write code.

      I think the problem is really that China is pushing far too many people into the fields of engineering and computer science. They don't have the educational infrastructure in place (thanks in large part to the Cultural Revolution) to support educating the amount of engineers and programmers they are producing. As such, quality suffers. They are trying to solve the problem by sending massive numbers of students abroad (and then bringing them back once they graduate), but if they're not careful the problem could become perpetual (bad programmers teaching students to program), resulting in poor quality for generations to come.

      --
      -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
    5. Re:This will kill open source in China by marcosdumay · · Score: 1, Troll

      "they are aware of the Western Linux and Opensource thing. They just have no interest in it. They do not understand the point of it; to them, it is simply based on an alien value system."

      In that they are no different from nearly everybody at the west.

    6. Re:This will kill open source in China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not interested? In fact one university made a copy version of FreeBSD and claimed their own, while obtaining millons of dollars from the government.It's named QiLin, and is for defence research.They actualy baned Sourceforge for sometime with nation wide firewall just to fool the public. A company is also copying Android as we speak, it' named Ophone. Opensource was dead long ago in China, but for a different reason.

  21. Re:Quick! by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

    We need to keep tabs on it in order to assess their qualification as an Emergency Fallback option when our native countries become too oppressive.

  22. oh slashdot, by nimbius · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is mostly directed toward the op that decided to write the stories summary...but here goes

    I love how your phone is chinese, your clothes are chinese, your kitchen appliances are chinese and your furniture is chinese,
    yet you still think after complacently bankrolling what american politicians still insist is a 'communist' state, that you're entitled to
    any semblance of a dissenting opinion.

    either take a real stand against the arguably communist empire you so openly support, or shut the hell up and buy another TV.
    peppering your articles with sensationalist sentament about human rights in china makes no sense otherwise,
    and its even more nonsensical when people realize you're american and living under the patriot act.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:oh slashdot, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I think anyone who thinks the USA is bankrolling China has things a tad backwards.
      America only looks rich because of all the borrowed money it spends.

    2. Re:oh slashdot, by Rennt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You seem to know an awful lot about the OP's lifestyle, spending habits and motivations. Projecting much?

      There isn't anything nonsensical about an American being concerned with human rights. It's even less nonsensical if you believe Americans share some of the responsibility.

      I suppose weakly rationalizing your own complacency isn't nonsensical either - it's just appalling.

    3. Re:oh slashdot, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love how you think hypocrisy is a logical fallacy.

      It may be bad taste, it may be double-standards, but hypocrisy does not affect the validity or truth-value of an argument.

      Thinking otherwise is lumping yourself into rhetoric, the dark side of the force that lots of politicians subscribe to in order to whip up emotions in their constituency and make them vote yay for crappy legislation.

    4. Re:oh slashdot, by icebraining · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So because we don't agree with China's government, we should starve their people by refusing to provide them with work? Nice logic.

    5. Re:oh slashdot, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My smart phone is made in Korea :-P

    6. Re:oh slashdot, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you read the summary? He mentions he is in china because baidu is the biggest "here"

      How do you propose he stops buying from the Chinese when he is in the country?

    7. Re:oh slashdot, by russotto · · Score: 1

      I love how your phone is chinese, your clothes are chinese, your kitchen appliances are chinese and your furniture is chinese,

      My phone is Korean, my appliances are Mexican, American, and Canadian, my furniture is Canadian and Danish, and the clothes I'm wearing are Honduran and Mexican.

    8. Re:oh slashdot, by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      By the same logic, why should Microsoft discriminate against their people by refusing to provide them with better services?

      Hence GP's point - if you complain about MS (or any other company) doing business with China, and yet buy goods manufactured in China for yourself despite having financial means to do otherwise, it's a hypocritical position.

  23. Kaiser's working for Baidu now? by Shag · · Score: 2

    Interesting... though not as cool as what he did before. :)

    --
    Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    1. Re:Kaiser's working for Baidu now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I loved his original band, T'ang Dynasty (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tang_Dynasty_(band)), which, I believe, was the first Chinese heavy metal band. Kaiser was one of its founding members. They used to get decent airplay in the early days of Asian MTV. Now I'm not Chinese, but metal is metal, even if it was in a language I didn't understand :).

    2. Re:Kaiser's working for Baidu now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is right, "T'ang Chao" lays claim to being China's first heavy metal band. Kaiser is a genuine rock star -- I have yet to meet a Chinese person (in the U.S. and elsewhere) who does not know of T'ang Dynasty. But he's had a whole side career as a technology guru/cross-cultural spokesperson/writer.

  24. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China is like a facade, like in the wild-west movies. What they show you is beautiful. They won't show you the ugly parts. But today, most governments are becoming more and more like dictators, nobody listens anymore to their own people. In the Netherlands for example, it doesn't matter who you vote for, you still get the same idiots, doing there own things, without listening to the people.

    It's like with businesses, they would love to be able to survive without any customers, because customers mostly only complain.

    I do not own a iPhone or a smart phone. But today it is mostly impossible to buy anything of technology not made in China. Even if you buy it from a European company, it is bound to have at least a few parts "Made in China". Even if you buy a more expensive computer, most parts are from China, and the quality sucks too. An other problem is, that it is difficult to see if it is from mainland China, or from Taiwan. And a lot of Chinese firms don't put the tag "Made in China" on it, just to sell there products more.

    The governments aren't doing anything about it, they are much too eager to bed with it, than putting an halt to it. When the EU or US don't put a stop to importing stuff from China, it will become very difficult to do something about it.

  25. New anti-gravity? by cheros · · Score: 1

    This situation reminds me of the buttered toast & cats approach to anti-gravity.. :-)

    --
    Insert .sig here. Send no money now. Owner may sue, contents will settle. Batteries not included.
  26. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by migla · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So, what exactly have you done to not support Chinese? Do you buy products that have been only made and manufactured in the US, even if its higher price? Do you own iPhone or any other known mobile phone? Does any of your product read Made in China? Instead of blaming Microsoft for doing business with Chinese, what about you taking the first step?

    Yes, it is good to recognize that oneself plays a part as a cog in the machinery. As a wise man once said:

    "Hoo! Hoo! Hoo!
    Aaow!
    (Yeah-Make That Change)
    Gonna Make That Change . . .
    Come On!
    (Man In The Mirror)
    You Know It!
    You Know It!
    You Know It!
    You Know . . .
    (Change . . .)
    Make That Change. "

    But, it is also unfortunately the case that us little consumers don't really run the world. You and I, individually, might be on top of things, at least a bit, using our purchasing power for good, but on the whole, the notion that consumers rule is false. Even if they technically might, we actually don't, because we buy what they tell us to buy (not you and me individually, but all of us in aggregate).

    The consumerist, vote-with-your-wallet-perspective is often useful, but one should not neglect to also look at it from the perspective that maybe the rich and powerful actually are running the show. (Besides, they have very large wallets and some of them have very many guns, even).

    It is convenient for the superpowers and mega-corps if we think consumers have the power. And we do. That's the ingenious bit. It's just that the rich and powerful pervert our potentially rational choices with marketing and through better access to mass communication than the little gal has.

    In addition to voting with the wallet, people should, in my opinion, feel free to keep bitching on /. about the bad things the powerful countries and corporations do. Even if they can't be bothered to wean themselves completely from the convenience of the big cheap teat that is made in china, backed by tyranny and systematized greed.

    --
    Some of my favourite people are from th US; Vonnegut, Chomsky, Bill Hicks.
  27. For a second i though about wasting my mod points by drolli · · Score: 1

    but Microsoft and China in one discussion triggers all reflexes to recklessly troll around....

  28. incoming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Cue a slew of comments about life in China from people who've never been there

    1. Re:incoming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never been to the surface of the moon but I can tell you a lot about its composition. Simply not having been to a place doesn't invalidate a well researched point. Admittedly a lot of people have knee jerk reactions, but you can't tell one of those from a valid point just by how well travelled the commenter is.

  29. Full circle: Googles "do no evil" was aimed at m$ by phonewebcam · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Google pull out of China because censorship is evil, so in steps m$, the outfit Google coined their motto from originally. But wait ... m$ don't have a search engine of their own, so can the Google servers take the load from them merely throwing up a wrapper round theirs?

  30. Re by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hopefully, at the same time :D

  31. Google by sourcerror · · Score: 1

    Google didn't have a problem with that until their servers got hacked.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2010/jan/12/google-china-ends-censorship

  32. ...that you're apologizing for China. by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    N/T

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  33. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by icebraining · · Score: 1

    The problem isn't China, it's the government. Refusing to buy Chinese products wouldn't help with their censorship, it would only leave their population poorer. But Microsoft is helping the censorship by complying with it, making it easier to enforce.

  34. As they say... by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    Baidu Bing, Baidu boom!

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  35. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by c · · Score: 1

    > > But what's a few dead, organ-harvested people under the bridge
    > > who voiced their opposition to the company town?
    >
    > A business expense.

    That depends upon how much you get for the organs, doesn't it?

    --
    Log in or piss off.
  36. Uh-huh.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah.. and lets do this whining using stuff made in china.

  37. I'm confused by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    But what's a few dead, organ-harvested people under the bridge who voiced their opposition to the company town?

    Do you mean Beijing or Redmond?

  38. Re:Quick! by paiute · · Score: 1

    If one is to believe that our world is interconnected, then it only provides a model where liberty is granted only to the few who have the cash to purchase it - instead of providing it to all who seek it.

    China is a case of why you don't simply just go for business friendliness, but freedom for all citizens without regard to involvement in commerce.

    You must have missed the memo. Fascism is back in a big way - it's just that the government and industry traded places.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
  39. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by xaxa · · Score: 1

    So, what exactly have you done to not support Chinese? Do you buy products that have been only made and manufactured in the US, even if its higher price? Do you own iPhone or any other known mobile phone?

    It wasn't any part of my decision to buy the phone, but HTC makes stuff in Taiwan (they are a Taiwanese company).

  40. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The consumerist, vote-with-your-wallet-perspective is often useful, but one should not neglect to also look at it from the perspective that maybe the rich and powerful actually are running the show. (Besides, they have very large wallets and some of them have very many guns, even).

    Tell that to the people at Syria. There the large wallets actually have guns. And tanks. And planes. But people fight back. Because there's are hundred people for every gun, and they cannot kill you all. And the big wallets know it. And they also know that a gun doesn't care who's the target. But enough of that.

    The rich do try to run the show . That's not bad in itself, unless the show is run for their own benefit. And they can only do that if you stop caring or they can hide what they do.

    It is convenient for the superpowers and mega-corps if we think consumers have the power. And we do. That's the ingenious bit. It's just that the rich and powerful pervert our potentially rational choices with marketing and through better access to mass communication than the little gal has.

    OK, so the rich are at the wheel. It doesn't matter unless you also allow them to decide where to go. Don't do that, decide by yourself.

  41. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

    This sort of thing is the reason I was in favour of lawsuits against companies in the 80's and 90's who'd profited from slave labour back in WWII.

    If US companies now sense that dealing with nasty totalitarian states can result in an expensive lawsuit in the future it might make them a bit more wary of doing it.

    As for Microsoft I'm the odd situation of disliking them intensely now on slashdot long after it was fashionable to do so. Back in the days when most people here hated them I actually didn't really object to them so much.

    Now it's like everything they announce is an attempt to troll me.

    --
    echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  42. English Search Results by StormReaver · · Score: 1

    So, Google's now going to be providing English search results for China?

  43. Microsoft's ethical vacuity in this area by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Microsoft's ethical vacuity in this area is no surprise. A year and a half ago, in "Microsoft's Ballmer to China: Forget Google -- If You Want Censorship, Come to Bing!" link

    "The U.S. is the most extreme when it comes to free speech .. If the Chinese government gives us proper legal notice, we’ll take that piece of information out of the Bing search engine" link

  44. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    America starts plenty of wars. What you're really worried about is starting a war that you not only can't win (you've got plenty of experience with that) but starting one where you get smashed back into the stone age. The worst kind of bully is one who never picks on anyone who can fight back.

  45. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Talk about going 5th grade, read your idiotic comment.

  46. Baidu Is Not Google by billrp · · Score: 1

    bing

  47. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by rainmouse · · Score: 1

    As for Microsoft I'm the odd situation of disliking them intensely now on slashdot long after it was fashionable to do so.

    On the bright side it means you may soon be able to get Google search results in China through Bing's innovative technology. ie copy paste.

  48. Re:Yes, just that its ring is more sinister in Chi by zach_the_lizard · · Score: 1

    Through currency manipulation and buying our debt, the Chinese government is actually subsidizing the US; they are helping us buy their bullets at their own expense.

    --
    SSC
  49. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    But, it is also unfortunately the case that us little consumers don't really run the world. You and I, individually, might be on top of things, at least a bit, using our purchasing power for good, but on the whole, the notion that consumers rule is false. Even if they technically might, we actually don't, because we buy what they tell us to buy (not you and me individually, but all of us in aggregate).

    The consumerist, vote-with-your-wallet-perspective is often useful, but one should not neglect to also look at it from the perspective that maybe the rich and powerful actually are running the show.

    No, nobody is running the show. This is what happens when a movie has no director. It could be worse; we could have a director with an absolute crap vision.

    We CAN vote with our wallets, we CAN make a difference. Start with yourself. Then go convince two other people to do the same. Spend some actual time at it. If you succeed then you will have achieved more than you did when you changed your own habits.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  50. Morons will be morons ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's just say that this are mostly the same people who believe Al Gore is against CO2 emissions. You could do an animal welfare fundraiser where you have to shoot puppies and these people would simply believe your good intentions. You can have a "feminist convention" where a muslim comes talk about how liberating it is to get stoned ...

    Morons will be morons. Whatever is the path of least resistance, that is the universal unassailable moral path for these idiots. The science is settled, as they say.

  51. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by cavreader · · Score: 2

    "This sort of thing is the reason I was in favour of lawsuits against companies in the 80's and 90's who'd profited from slave labour back in WWII." Why stop at WW2? Why not go back to the south in the 1800's or back even further to the Roman Empire that was built by slave labor? How far into the past do we have to go to punish people today for something none of them had anything to do with?

  52. I know why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Baidu Bing search: "Operating system"

    1 result found.

    1. Re:I know why by tenshihan · · Score: 1

      linux: no result? prolly not

  53. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by walterbyrd · · Score: 0

    It's not the hellhole some people try to portray it as being, and neither are all of it's factories sweatshops.

    No kidding. What are foxconn workers earning now? An opulent $0.35 an hour? And they only have to work 14 hours days, six days a week. And they get a sponge bath once a week. Not to mention the luxurious 14" board they get to sleep on.

    And to think, a lot of them consider suicide a better option. Buncha cry-babies.

  54. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

    Supporting China isn't necessarily a problem. I've done work for a Chinese manufacturer and I have no moral qualms about it. The difference is that they were an honest business. I wouldn't work for a Chinese company that actively engages in the censorship of the internet. That's a dishonest business.

    This isn't a China = Bad issue. It's a censorship = Bad issue. Google had no problem doing business in China. They had a problem with censoring their search results.

    --
    "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
  55. Torrents anyone by motang · · Score: 1

    English is probably used to search for torrents

  56. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

    I'd love to buy North American goods but there are hardly any out there compared to "Made in China" goods. Finding stuff that is not made in China is actually pretty hard.
    Someone should make a UPC scanner app that offers you "Made in XX" products as alternatives.

  57. Censorship Example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For fun, go to Baidu.com and search for "Falun Gong". The site will become unresponsive and will be down for you for a few minutes and I think doing it a few more times will cause it do go down for 24 hours. I've heard that doing this while in China will not only prevent baidu.com from working, but your entire Internet connection becomes inoperable.

    1. Re:Censorship Example by jpapon · · Score: 1

      Yikes... that's pretty scary. On the other hand, at least they don't try to hide their censorship... they smack you in the face with it and if you don't like it, too damn bad.

      --
      -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  58. ATTENTION RETARD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Jingoism" from its start had always been a fallacious attack, but for the last several decades it has had exactly ZERO relevance regardless.

    Besides, no one here is critical of Baidu simply because they are a Chinese(-owned, multinational) corporation. We're critical because not only does Baidu dominate the Chinese search engine market, they are also the most aggressive in regards to censorship. And, yes, that censorship extends to US customers. When we're talking about internet censorship and oppression in China, Baidu is usually involved. That's about once a week here, if you're new.

    Baidu has earned our criticism. Do some fucking research. And trash that word-of-the-day calendar, you stupid prick.

  59. Bla bla human rights bla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Regardless of who China is or what they've done, what this news suggests is MS has acknowledged that language barriers have imposed virtual subnets on the wider internet (much more effectively than firewalls). These can be considered pockets of exploitable users, now that Google and Facebook have demonstrated that your users don't have to have money for your company worth to skyrocket.

    As all their rivals are immersed in heated battle in the English-language arena, this might be an opportunity for MS to slip out the backdoor to make friends and build assets in the East. Then in 2016 when we're all sipping iMartinis and scoffing at Windows 9 from our various UNIXy devices, a billion Asians will appear from nowhere armed with app-free Windows Phones and waving wads of cash, and I'll have to go back to developing things that are interesting in my spare time again.

  60. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by camperslo · · Score: 1

    How far into the past do we have to go to punish people...

    DNA can be thought of as just more cookies...but they only go so far. Do you know where your atoms have been?? Were you once part of a hostile volcano or an exploding star?

    IBM sold their laptop division, now living through the Chinese brand Lenovo.
    Maybe it's time for the search or better yet the OS portions of Microsoft to be sold too?

  61. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by rtfa-troll · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure you understand doing business in China. The profits from the organ donations go to the party member (or occasionally directly to the branch). So do the contract payments. You just get the peace and security of knowing that the local Linux users won't want to start reverse engineering your protocols.

    --
    =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  62. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

    Would you support the middle east countries if they refused to sell us oil unless we allowed Sharia to be taught in our schools? After all they don't believe in separation of church and state and would consider it discrimination, so we should just comply, yes?

    As much as I think the great firewall of China sucks it isn't the USA's job to tell others how to live and if the Chinese don't want it? Let them rise up and do something about it. Last I saw on it the people for the most part had bought it as a block on porn and the average Chinese was pretty complaisant about it.

    So if you don't want to buy Chinese products because you don't support their policies? Good for you and I'm glad you are able to live without most electronics, same if you wish to do without products by any company that does business with China. But butting in and telling other countries how they should live has been the source of one clusterfuck after another when it comes to the USA, and I think frankly both we here in the USA and those in others countries would be much better off if we were to STFU and worry about our own affairs instead of every else's.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  63. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by KingBenny · · Score: 1

    i like China a lot, they are free of western hippie morals, what troubles me is microsoft getting the monopoly on english based searches ... can you see the duality, if not, goto your statement

    --
    Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
  64. You mean Peking or Redmond by sethstorm · · Score: 0

    I'm quite sure that Redmond hasn't done that badly to people working there.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  65. How many Engrish searches? by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    As badly as they butcher English on signs, I'd wonder if they'd do the same in searches.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  66. Re:Embrace China, Extend cash and Extinguish disse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technically iPhones are made in Taiwan, a first world country with working conditions more advanced than the United States.